Anthropology
Related: About this forumNever seen a picture of the great rift valley before.
The Great Rift Valley in ð°ðª is a massive geological trench, part of a larger system stretching from the Middle East to Mozambique, formed by tectonic plates pulling apart.
— ContempraInn ð¹ (@contemprainn.bsky.social) 2026-06-19T17:26:58.570Z
hlthe2b
(115,135 posts)My only real context is Rift Valley Fever--a horrific viral disease spread by animals and ticks that causes a hemorrhagic fever and was first discovered there but seen elsewhere since.
Nice to see a photo of the actual region with its tribal people--sans any disease contexts.
applegrove
(133,666 posts)anthropology digs.
hlthe2b
(115,135 posts)applegrove
(133,666 posts)all along the East coast of Africa and stop at certain anthropology sites where you would be lectured to by a professor. I so wanted to do that. Support local communities too. They don't do that anymore.
sinkingfeeling
(58,220 posts)Farmer-Rick
(12,845 posts)Looks like the edge of the world....if there was such a thing, this would be it.
JoseBalow
(9,887 posts)Bev54
(13,557 posts)Loved that movie.
paleotn
(23,039 posts)The Great Rift Valley. The Danakil Depression. Particularly the Erta Ale lava lake. Afar is a damn dangerous place though. Mores the pity since I'd love to see it. A picture of what eastern North America and west Africa looked like as they began to part ways 200 million years ago.
applegrove
(133,666 posts)paleotn
(23,039 posts)A visit to the Danakil depression requires heavily armed guards and even then there's no guarantee of safety. The lava lake is one of the vents of the volcano Erta Ale. One of the most volcanically active places on earth. The Rift Valley itself is a pretty good analog for the giant rift that began ~200 million years ago splitting North America and Africa, creating the Atlantic Ocean. Almost like going back in time hundreds of millions of years.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erta_Ale
applegrove
(133,666 posts)when I looked it up online.
Response to applegrove (Original post)
applegrove This message was self-deleted by its author.
Martin68
(28,247 posts)but because the Great Rift Valley is the source of the most important ancient human fossils.
LudwigPastorius
(15,228 posts)GiqueCee
(5,014 posts)... what is the giveaway? I've been a graphics professional for 60+ years, and I've got a pretty keen eye for fakery, but I don't see it. I'm not trying to be a smartass, I genuinely want to know, what's the tell? I'm always ready to learn.
The cloudy dust at the bottom of the lefthand slope is a bit fuzzy. Is that what you're referring to?
LudwigPastorius
(15,228 posts)Although, the wind is whipping the hem of the men's robes, their shadows don't move. Also, the spears don't cast shadows.
And, while the angle of the shot changes as the camera (drone?) flies overhead, the perspective of the two figures barely changes at all.
Hive AI Detector also seems to think this is fake...for what that is worth.
https://hivemoderation.com/ai-generated-content-detection

GiqueCee
(5,014 posts)... thanks for taking the time to point out those subtleties. My powers of observation need an oil change.
Marcuse
(9,139 posts)
GiqueCee
(5,014 posts)... seemed convinced that the shot was generative AI. Why? That brief pan is consistent with other photos of the Valley that I've seen from similar vantage points, and why would anyone bother to mess with something that is already so magnificent to behold?
Undiagnosed Oppositional/Defiant Disorder, maybe?
